FIELD OF THE ART
[0001] The present invention relates to the field of inorganic chemistry, particularly to
a method of purifying gaseous nitrogen trifluoride from carbon tetrafluoride.
STATE OF THE ART
[0002] Nitrogen trifluoride is widely used in the manufacture of semiconductor materials,
high-energy lasers and in chemical gas phase precipitation processes. Unlike elementary
fluorine, nitrogen trifluoride can be easily transported in condensed form with packing
density of up to 600 g/l, using containers for storing compressed gases with a pressure
of up to 110 atm (J. Fluor. Chem., 1991, 56, No. 1―3, p. 37).
[0003] Present-day electronic industry sets very high requirements to the purity of nitrogen
trifluoride used in technologies of high-purity semiconductor materials. With the
content of the main substance 99.9―99.999% NF
3, the total content of impurities should not exceed 10―1000 ppm or volume parts per
million parts of the main product. The most difficult technological task is purifying
nitrogen trifluoride from carbon tetrafluoride as impurity, whose content even in
a small amount involves a problem in the process of etching semiconductors due to
formation of solid residues of carbon or silicon carbide. The complexity of separating
NF
3 and CF
4 stems from insignificant difference in the size of their molecules and in the boiling
point, the latter not exceeding 1°C (Gmelin Handbook, 1986, v. 4, pp. 179―180).
[0004] Known in the art is a process of separating gaseous fluorides by gas chromatography
techniques, using as the separation phase a silica gel having an average pore diameter
of 22 Å mixed with a liquid low-molecular chlorotrifluoroetylene polymer in an amount
of 5―30 wt.% (US 3125425, 17.03.64). The polymer is liquid at 0°C, has a molecular
weight of 200 to 1500 and a boiling point of 121―260°C at 0.5 mm of Hg pressure. The
process of gas chromatography separation enables obtaining fluorides with a concentration
higher than 90% of the main substance from gas mixtures containing NF
3 and CF
4, at temperatures of -80 to 50°C. This process suffers from such disadvantages as
low efficiency, high consumption of helium or other inert gas (to 500 liters per liter
of NF
3), and also insufficiently high effectiveness of the separation when the concentration
of impurities is smaller than 1 vol.%. The purity of the nitrogen trifluoride obtained
by the known process does not exceed 99 vol.%., this being obviously insufficient
for using the product in the electronic industry.
[0005] For obtaining gaseous halides with electronic industry level purity, there was proposed
a gas chromatography method, in which a porous polymer is used, in particular "Poropak",
as the separating (adsorption) medium (Z. Analyt. Chem., 1968, 235, No. 4, pp. 341―344).
This method has found wide application in the gas chromatography of mixtures of nitrogen
trifluoride with CF
4, N
2F
2, CO
2, N
2O and some other impurities, but its application for providing an industrial gas purification
process holds no promise in view of an insignificant difference in the yield time
of CF
4 and NF
3 and large consumption of the separating inert gas.
[0006] For overcoming the above-indicated disadvantages, there was proposed a method of
isolating NF
3 from a mixture of NF
3 and CF
4, using gas-solid chromatography techniques and yielding components with purity as
high as 99.99% (US 5069690, 03.12.91). This invention is an improved method of preparative
gas chromatography for separating CF
4 from NF
3, using hydrothermally treated zeolite molecular sieve 5A as the chromatographic adsorbent,
or chabazite. The method consists in passing discrete pulses of a mixture of NF
3 and CF
4 in a continuous flow of an inert carrier gas through a bed of porous adsorbent that
kinetically adsorbs NF
3 more readily than CF
4. As such adsorbent use is made of hydrothermally pretreated 5A molecular sieve or
chabazite having an effective pore window ranging from 4.4 to 4.8 Å. It should be
noted, however, that under static conditions, as is seen from Figs. 4, 5, 6 presented
in said Patent, the employed sorbents adsorb NF
3 and CF
4 in an absolutely similar manner. The mass velocity of gas is from 2.5 to 8.6 g/cm
2hr. Large consumption of the separating carrier gas (at least 100 liters per liter
of the obtained NF
3) enables the authors to recommend the use hydrogen, along with helium, nitrogen and
argon, this being permissible from the standpoint of the explosion safety of the process,
only when the NF
3 concentration in mixtures with H
2 is at least 9.0 vol.%.
[0007] The main disadvantages of this NF
3 isolation method are: low efficiency, large consumption of the carrier gas, necessity
in special energy-demanding hydrothermal pretreatment of the zeolite (untreated zeolite
does not allow separating the mixture of NF
3 and CF
4 and providing the required quality of the product), as well as necessity in very
precise regulation of the flow discharge of all the gas flows, so as to preclude secondary
contamination of nitrogen trifluoride at the outlet of the separation plant.
[0008] All this complicates the process and makes it economically disadvantageous for industrial
implementation.
[0009] Known in the art is a method of removing water and nitrous oxide from a mixture containing
nitrogen trifluoride, water, nitrous oxide, carbon dioxide, difluorodiazine; the mixture
may further contain oxygen, carbon tetrafluoride and sulfur hexafluoride or their
mixtures (JP 10-259011, 29.09.98.
[0010] In said Japanese Patent there is set and solved a problem of purifying nitrogen trifluoride
from water and nitrous oxide and to rule out the interaction of NF
3 with the adsorbent (zeolite), which results in secondary contamination of NF
3 with nitrous oxide.
[0011] For accomplishing this object, the authors of said JP Patent have developed a two-step
method, wherein, first, water is removed on a zeolite with a pore size of at least
3 Å by contact with the zeolite having a Si/Al ratio greater than 3.0 (preferably
4.5), selecting zeolite from the group of clinoptilolite, mordenite, offretite, erionite,
ZSM-5, ferrierite, L, omega, beta or their mixture.
[0012] The authors of said Patent observe that none of the zeolites adsorbs NF
3.
[0013] According to the Examples presented in the specification, for the purification of
nitrogen trifluoride from N
2O impurity, sodium mordenite is used (Example 2). In other Examples 1, 3―6) a possibility
is shown to rule out secondary contamination of NF
3 with nitrous oxide due to the interaction of NF
3 with the zeolite.
[0014] As it follows from the specification, said method does not solve the problem of separating
the mixture of NF
3 and CF
4, though the authors speak about possible presence of CF
4 in the mixture, separation of the NF3 and CF
4 mixture is shown neither in the Examples nor in the text.
[0015] Closest in its technical essence and the attained result to the method proposed in
our invention is the method of purifying gaseous nitrogen trifluoride containing CF
4 as impurity, comprising the step of contacting gaseous nitrogen trifluoride with
a crystalline porous synthetic zeolite which is substantially uniform in the pore
size and has an effective pore size of about 4.9 Å at a temperature of from -50 to
10°C, subsequent displacement of the gases, containing CF
4, from the adsorbent, desorption of the purified nitrogen trifluoride, and condensation
(US 5069887, 3.12.91, prototype). As the synthetic zeolite molecular sieve 5A is used,
represented by the empirical formula Ca
6Al
12Si
12O
48×H
2O, containing 1―10 wt.% of crystallization water. With the content of crystallization
water in the zeolite 5A less than 1 wt.%, the adsorbent effectively adsorbs both CF
4 and NF
3 without noticeable selectivity. With the content of water greater than 10%, the sorption
of NF
3 and CF
4 occurs in almost equal and very small amounts. Adsorption temperature is an essential
factor, since above 10°C the degree of NF
3 adsorption lowers markedly. For displacing CF
4 from the molecular sieve an inert gas (helium) is used. Desorption of nitrogen trifluoride
is carried out under vacuum. Nitrogen trifluoride obtained by this method contains
less than 10 ppm CF
4, this corresponding to the requirements of the electronic industry.
[0016] As the authors of said Patent indicate, using molecular sieves or zeolites of other
class, it is difficult to effect selective adsorption of NF
3 alone. Only with the use of molecular sieve 5A with the pore size of about 4.9 Å,
on condition that the water content ranges within 1 to 10 wt.% and the zeolite is
maintained at a temperature not higher than 10°C, selective adsorption of NF
3 is attainable.
[0017] The above method suffers from such disadvantages as a considerable lowering of the
adsorbent capacity from 4.5 to 1 wt.% NF
3 even within the indicated range of crystallization water content in the molecular
sieve 5A, and an insignificant operating life of the zeolite. Maintaining a temperature
of -50 to 10°C in the adsorption zone is called for not so much by the factor of lowering
the capacity of the molecular sieve 5A, though this factor is very significant, as,
in the opinion of the authors of the present invention, by the necessity of minimizing
the course of the reaction of hydrolysis of nitrogen trifluoride in the process of
desorption and, correspondingly, of minimizing the fluorination of the molecular sieve
with the products of hydrolysis, which occurs in the sorbent regeneration above 60°C.
Probably, in the case of separating pure two-component mixtures of NF
3 and CF
4 on molecular sieve 5A at temperatures of -50 to 10°C, the period of cyclic operation
of the zeolite would have been sufficiently long. However, the presence of even a
relatively small amount (from 10 to 100 ppm) of such impurities as CO
2, N
2O, N
2F
2 and H
2O, adsorbed as well as NF
3 by the molecular sieve 5A, leads to substantial lowering of the zeolite capacity
for NF
3 and to the necessity of regenerating the adsorbent.
[0018] In this case the recommended adsorbent ― molecular sieve 5A with water content of
1―10 wt.% ― comprises a contradiction: on the one hand, this is the necessity of presence
of crystallization water for providing selective separation of the mixture of NF
3 and CF
4; on the other hand, this is the necessity of maximum prevention of the course of
the reaction of NF
3 hydrolysis and zeolite fluorination. All this is indicative of the process instability
and of its being difficult to reproduce under industrial conditions.
[0019] It should be noted that the factor of chemical stability to fluorination and the
stability of the pore (window) size of the molecular sieve involved thereby is sufficiently
ponderable, taking into account a large volume of the adsorbent to be used in industrial
implementation of the method and its high cost.
ESSENCE OF THE INVENTION
[0020] It is an object of the invention to provide an industrial method of sorption purification
of nitrogen trifluoride from CF
4 as impurity, as well as to enhance the chemical stability and prolong the operating
life of the sorbent.
[0021] Said object is accomplished by using as the adsorbent a molecular sieve of erionite
type of the empirical formula (Na,K)
9Al
9Si
27O
72·27H
2O, having a minimum and maximum window (pore) diameters equal to 3.5 and 5.2 Å, predehydrated
to the water content less than 1.0 wt.%.
[0022] The proposed method of purifying nitrogen trifluoride comprises the following steps:
- selective adsorption of NF3 by a porous synthetic zeolite at a temperature of -30 to 30°C;
- displacement of carbon tetrafluoride by an inert gas from the surface of the zeolite;
- desorption and condensation of the purified nitrogen trifluoride.
[0023] The selectivity of the molecular sieve effect of zeolite can, as a rule, be evaluated
by comparing the molecular sizes and the pore diameter. Though it is known that there
exists an interrelation between the structure of zeolites, their activity and various
factors, a distinctive feature of zeolites is a regular porous crystalline structure
formed by a system of cavities and channels. The adsorption cavity of erionite has
the form of a cylinder with a diameter of 6.3 to 6.6 Å and the length of 15.1 Å. Sorbate
molecules can penetrate into the erionite cavity through six elliptical windows formed
by 8-membered oxygen rings. The minimum and maximum size of an elliptical window are
3.5 and 5.2 Å, respectively. It should be noted that, unlike elliptical windows in
erionite, windows in 5A zeolite are approximately round. The porous structure of 5A
zeolite is formed by a three-dimensional network of large spherical cavities, whose
diameter is 11.4 Å. Molecules can penetrate into the cavity through six windows having
a free diameter of 4.2 to 4.9 Å (see Jule A. Rabo (Ed.), Zeolite Chemistry and Catalysis
(Russian Edition), Moscow: Mir, 1980, v. 1, pp. 474-475, 480-481).
[0024] It is likely that the specific feature of the erionite molecular sieve structure
is such that it makes possible to carry out the process of NF
3 adsorption selectively with respect to CF
4 under the found conditions. Mixtures with any concentration of CF
4 impurity can be subjected to purification, but it is especially difficult to purify
a mixture of NF
3 and CF
4, in which the amount of CF
4 as impurity is smaller than 1.0 wt.%.
[0025] Comparing the chemical composition of the 5A molecular sieve and erionite, it should
be noted that the SiO
2/Al
2O
3 and SiO
2/Me
nO ratio for erionite is 1.5 times higher, this factor being decisive for the acid
resistance of molecular sieves, and, consequently, for the operating life of the adsorbent.
For separating a mixture of gaseous NF
3 and CF
4, the authors used commercial zeolite (erionite) of grade KNaE.
[0026] The content of water in erionite should not exceed 1.0 wt.%. An increase of water
content in the zeolite reduces its capacity and involves a possibility of hydrolysis
processes to occur. Therefore, prior to starting the sorption, the adsorbent is subjected
to predehydratation with a stream of air or nitrogen heated to 300°C. Adsorption is
carried out in the range of temperatures from -30 to 30°C, predominantly at the ambient
temperature. Temperature lowering is economically inexpedient, while at a temperature
higher than 30°C the capacity of erionite lowers, and the efficiency of the purification
process lowers accordingly.
[0027] On completion of the process of NF
3 sorption, gaseous nitrogen having a temperature not exceeding 20°C is passed through
the sorbent during a period of time sufficient for complete displacement of CF
4-containing gases, as confirmed by an analysis of relief gases.
[0028] Desorption of the purified nitrogen trifluoride from the zeolite is effected with
gaseous nitrogen preheated to 20―60°C. The process of desorption is stopped when the
NF
3 concentration in the waste gas lowers to 0.5 vol.%.
[0029] Nitrogen trifluoride formed in the desorption step, in a mixture with nitrogen comes
to condensation at a temperature of minus 150―190°C.
[0030] Condensation of nitrogen trifluoride from its gaseous mixtures with nitrogen leads
to partial condensation of nitrogen. The removal of nitrogen from liquid NF
3 is performed by known methods. As a result of purification, 99.99% pure NF
3 is obtained.
[0031] The composition of gaseous NF
3 before and after the purification is determined by chromatographic analysis.
[0032] In the course of nitrogen trifluoride purification from CF
4 such high-boiling impurities as CO
a, N
2O, N
2F
2 may accumulate gradually on the zeolite, whereby the sorbent capacity may lower.
[0033] The authors of the present invention have revealed that after 50 cycles of adsorption
purification the sorbent capacity lowers to 10% of the starting one. In this connection,
it is recommendable to carry out periodically erionite regeneration by purging with
an inert gas with a temperature of 20―100°C. In the proposed method of adsorption
with a low content of water in erionite the process of hydrolysis is ruled out, therefore
the desorption and zeolite regeneration are feasible at high temperatures, and this
does not lead to its fluorination. Thus, the service life of the adsorbent is prolonged
and the process stability is increased. For instance, after carrying out 1200 operations
of adsorption purification and 40 operations of erionite regeneration, the quality
of the end product did not change, and the content of nonvolatile fluorides in the
zeolite did not exceed 0.01 wt.% (F). The developed method of sorption purification
of NF
3 from CF
4 impurity makes it possible to carry the process at the ambient temperature and with
a long operating life of the sorbent. The method is technologically effective, economically
expedient and can easily be implemented under industrial conditions.
[0034] The following examples are illustrative of the present invention, though the invention
is not limited to these examples.
Example 1
[0035] Purification of nitrogen trifluoride from CF
4 is carried out in a steel column having a length of 3.2 m and an inner diameter of
0.15 m, filled with 25 kg of dehydrated granulated molecular sieve KNaE (erionite)
in which the water content was about 0.8 wt.%. The adsorption column is provided with
sensors for measuring the gas temperature at the inlet and outlet, with pressure sensors,
and with filters to preclude the entrainment of dust-like zeolite particles.
[0036] Nitrogen trifluoride in an amount of 434 liters, having the composition: N
2, 8.5 vol.%; CF
4, 0.8 vol.%; NF
3, 90.6 vol.%; CO
2, 50 ppm; N
2O, 50 ppm; N
2F
2, 20 ppm is fed to an evacuated adsorption column at a rate such that the growth of
pressure in the column does not exceed 0.05 atm per minute.
[0037] Adsorption of nitrogen trifluoride is carried out at a temperature of 20 ± 1°C for
24 hrs. During this period of time, as a chromatographic analysis has shown, no NF
3 and high-boiling impurities are detected in the relief gases, and the CF
4 concentration is 6.7 vol.%.
[0038] On completion of the sorption process, for displacing waste gases containing CF
4 from the column, nitrogen is passed through the column at 20°C for 15 min. With the
absence of CF
4 in the waste gases, confirmed by chromatographic analysis, desorption of nitrogen
fluoride is started. For this purpose, nitrogen preheated to 60°C is fed to the column,
and desorption of nitrogen trifluoride is carried out with nitrogen recirculating
through the adsorption column and a condenser cooled to -190°C. The desorption process
lasts for about 3 hrs.
[0039] The purified nitrogen trifluoride obtained in the condenser, after the removal of
nitrogen, contained: NF
3, 99.99 vol.%; N
2, 0.005 vol.%; CF
4, ≤ 10 ppm; CO
2, ≤ 10 ppm; N
2O, 10 ≤ ppm. The weight of the end product was 1175 g. The yield of purified NF
3 was 94.3%.
[0040] The following Examples were carried out similarly to Example 1 and are presented
in the table hereinbelow.
